Barbera Talks about Exploring Both Sides of Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, Why Films Are Longer, What Is the Fest’s Sexiest Project
This year’s Venice Film Fest will see a plethora of big stars, Joaquin Phoenix and Lady Gaga in “Joker: Folie à Deux,” Cate Blanchett in Alfonso Cuarón’s TV series “Disclaimer,” Daniel Craig in Luca Guadagnino’s “Queer,” to mention just a few.
But Alberto Barbera, the festival’s artistic director, promises real grit underlying the glitz and the glamour of A-listers and celebs, who generate a lot of media.
Barbera’s mandate at Venice has been extended through 2026 by the new Biennale president Pietrangelo Buttafuoco, a right-wing journalist and author appointed by Italy’s ruling coalition.
Barbera makes it clear he has been given free rein at a time when top festivals are becoming “important tools” in discussions about the most persistent problems facing the world.
The 81st edition features movies that delve into two major geopolitical crises. “We’ve never backed down from dealing with thorny issues that can cause controversy,” Barbera says. “This year, we’ve got documentaries about both sides of the Russia-Ukraine conflict” — “Russians at War” from exiled Russian director Anastasia Trofimova and “Songs of Slow Burning Earth” from Ukrainian filmmaker Olha Zhurba. “And there are Israeli and Palestinian films that reflect on the contradictions of this conflict.”
Drop in global box office?
The drop is a consequence of the pandemic and the post-pandemic period. Audiences for years were forced to stay at home without being able to go to movie theaters. This generated an earthquake on the production side, causing cancellation of films, delays in production, as well as slowdowns in releases. So the moviegoing habit needs to be rebuilt. And this requires investments, creativity, etc. It will take some time.
I believe that one of the somewhat significant transformations the industry is going through concerns the duration of films. Movies used to have this standard running time of between 90 and 120 minutes, right? But now those movies are the exceptions to a norm. Or, rather, to two norms, because cinema seems to be taking two opposing paths.
And on the other hand, longer running times are due to several factors. One is the impact of TV series. The other is an attempt by the theatrical sector to counteract the competition of streamers by offering viewers more complex, richer, longer experiences at the movie theater.
The most erotic work at Venice — I don’t want to give away too much — is the Alfonso Cuarón-directed TV series “Disclaimer,” starring Cate Blanchett. The fourth episode of the series is really very extreme.
Israeli-Palestinian conflict at Venice?
Palestinian Film
The series is directed by Joe Wright — whose film about Churchill, “Oscar winning The Darkest Hour, we all remember. As a Brit, he has a foreigner’s gaze on Italy. This is an advantage, in that it takes it a somewhat more objective look at what happened during those years.
This series is an opportunity for an in-depth analysis that transcends any controversies that could arise. They have no reason to exist, because it is a highly documented work of historical reconstruction that concerns all of us, not just Italians. And, I must add, the historical time thar it describes has some pretty striking similarities with the present day.